The plural of leaf is leaves so it is table leaves
Leaves is the plural form of leaf.
Example: I want a tree with leaves! Not one leaf, with many leaves.
Leaves' e.g. "The leaves' many colours".
The plural form for the noun leaf is leaves; the plural possessive is leaves'.
Singular possessive: Leaf's
Plural possessive: Leaves'
Palm leaves.
The plural of the noun leaf is leaves.
leaf
Leaves
The possessive form for the noun leaf is leaf's.Example: You can usually identify a tree by the leaf's shape.
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
The possessive form is subsidiary's.
Bicyclist's is the possessive form.
The possessive form is librarian's.
The possessive form for the noun leaf is leaf's.Example: A leaf's imprint was left on the window.
The possessive form for the noun leaf is leaf's.Example: You can usually identify a tree by the leaf's shape.
The singular possessive of leaf is leaf's.Example: The leaf's colour changed from green to orange as autumn approached.
leaf's
The singular possessive of leaf is leaf's.Example: The leaf's colour changed from green to orange as autumn approached.
It is a leaf that is pretty good
the singular possessive for the word leaf is leaf apostrophe s
The singular possessive form is heart's; the plural possessive form is hearts'.
The possessive form is subsidiary's.
The possessive form of "synopsis" is "synopsis's" or "synopsis'."
No, it is singular, the possessive form of it is its. The plural form of it is they or them, and the possessive form is their.To answer the question directly: there is no such word as ITS'.
The singular possessive is Richard's; the plural possessive is Richards'.